Etihad slims down as Abu Dhabi trims its air travel ambitions

Reuters  |  DUBAI 

By Alexander Cornwell

Recently-appointed said on Tuesday the was becoming "more rational" and would not shy away from dropping routes that were commercially unsustainable.

After years of rapid expansion, Etihad plunged to a loss in 2016 following a slowdown in passenger traffic growth and failed investments in foreign airlines such as and

It has been restructuring since, and on Tuesday said it had reorganised into seven business units directly reporting to Douglas, as opposed to individual businesses operating under a group structure set up by his predecessor.

Some senior and mid-management employees will lose their jobs and others will be moved into new positions, Douglas told by phone, declining to disclose the number of jobs likely to be affected.

He said many thousands of people had left since the restructuring process began in 2016, but that job cuts were no longer a major focus for the group and that the reorganisation was about improving operational efficiency.

Etihad currently employs around 23,000 people.

The group also said Douglas had taken over direct responsibility of the business from Peter Baumgartner, who will continue to work with Etihad as an

KEEPING STAKES

Douglas joined in January from Britain's ministry of defence, replacing who left months earlier as a strategic review got underway.

Under Hogan, Etihad spent billions of dollars buying stakes in other airlines as it sought to transform into a major hub like has done for 128 kilometres away.

Etihad is now focused on point-to-point traffic to destinations where passengers want to visit Abu Dhabi, and not just fly through it, Douglas said.

Abu Dhabi, the of the United Arab (UAE), is hoping culture will attract tourists and last year opened a branch of the

Etihad's strategy of investing in other airlines unravelled last year with the collapse of and problems at

Douglas said, however, that Etihad would continue to hold its stakes in India's Jet Airways, Virgin Australia, Air Serbia, and

The carrier issued $1.2 billion in bonds with some of the airlines it owns stakes in. After the collapse of and those bonds have nosedived. Some investors expected Etihad or other entities to back the bonds.

Douglas said Etihad would continue to fulfil its obligations to the bonds, but declined to comment further.

Etihad is not legally obliged to back the bonds.

(Reporting by Alexander Cornwell; additional reporting by in Abu Dhabi; Editing by and Mark Potter)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, July 03 2018. 19:01 IST